A high-stakes defamation trial has commenced in a Sydney court, pitching Hollywood star Rebel Wilson against rising Australian actress Charlotte MacInnes, the lead of Wilson’s recently released musical comedy *The Deb*. At the center of the legal clash are a series of Instagram posts Wilson published in 2024 and 2025, which MacInnes’ legal team argues are baseless, malicious lies that have permanently damaged her professional reputation.\n\nThe events under scrutiny trace back to September 2023, when MacInnes and *The Deb* producer Amanda Ghost spent an afternoon at Sydney’s iconic Bondi Beach. After Ghost experienced a sudden allergic reaction to the cold ocean water — a condition called cold urticaria that triggered painful red welts and uncontrollable shaking — the pair retreated to Ghost’s nearby beachfront apartment. MacInnes ran a hot bath to help Ghost warm up, with both women remaining in their swimsuits while sharing the oversized tub, the court heard. Ghost’s assistant even stayed in the bathroom preparing hot drinks for part of the time, and the two never made physical contact, according to MacInnes’ senior counsel Sue Chrysanthou.\n\nWilson has claimed that MacInnes originally told her she felt sexually uncomfortable following the shared bath, filed an implicit complaint, then later retracted the claim in exchange for a plum lead theater role and a major record deal. But MacInnes’ legal team refutes every part of this narrative, arguing the actress never made any complaint of sexual harassment at all. Instead, they say Wilson twisted a passing comment about the situation being “bizarre” into a false harassment narrative to gain leverage in a separate dispute with *The Deb* producers over budget and contract terms. The defamation claims, Chrysanthou told the court, are nothing more than “completely false, fantasy, malicious concoctions.”\n\nOpening arguments on the first day of the trial included the presentation of private text exchanges between Wilson, Ghost and MacInnes, as well as email chains detailing the competing accounts of the 2023 incident. Court documents show Wilson even acknowledged in an early text to Ghost that “Charlotte says all good. She just meant ‘it was a bizarre situation’ not that she personally felt uncomfortable.” The three women even attended a Boy George concert together the same night the text was sent, the court confirmed.\n\nWilson’s legal team has pushed back against MacInnes’ claims, arguing that the young actress deliberately lied about ever making an initial complaint to win professional favor from Ghost. Since the incident, Wilson’s lawyer Dauid Sibtain noted, MacInnes has landed the lead role in a Boston production of *Gatsby* and secured a record deal, with new music expected to release imminently. “She’s suffered no harm to her reputation, indeed, her career has progressed,” Sibtain told the court, adding that MacInnes’ changed story was a calculated move to advance her career by aligning with Ghost’s version of events.\n\nFor MacInnes, a 2021 graduate of a Western Australian acting academy who rose to prominence through the stage version of *The Deb* before landing the film role, the allegations have destroyed her core reputation for honesty and integrity, and she is seeking unspecified damages in the case. *The Deb* premiered in Australian theaters earlier this month, marking Wilson’s latest project following her breakout roles in *Pitch Perfect* and *Bridesmaids*. This trial is not the only legal trouble Wilson is currently navigating: she is already involved in a separate contract dispute with *The Deb* producers in an Australian court, and faces another defamation lawsuit from the same producers in the U.S., where she has also filed a countersuit. The Sydney trial, which opened Monday, is scheduled to run for nine days as the court hears full arguments from both sides.
Rebel Wilson’s claims against actress are ‘malicious concoctions’, Australian court hears
